Jump to content

Deep Note

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 199.0.81.121 (talk) at 03:20, 19 October 2005 (→‎External links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

File:James a moorer.jpg
James A. Moorer.

Deep Note is the name of THX's audio logo, a distinctive synthesized crescendo sound. It was created by Dr. James "Andy" Moorer in 1982, then an employee of the Lucasfilm Computer Division. The sound is used on trailers for THX-certified movie theatres and video releases.

The sound is a registered U.S. trademark (serial number 74309951). The registration contains the following description of the sound:

The THX logo theme consists of 30 voices over seven measures, starting in a narrow range, 200 to 400 Hz, and slowly diverting to preselected pitches encompassing three octaves. The 30 voices begin at pitches between 200 Hz and 400 Hz and arrive at pre-selected pitches spanning three octaves by the fourth measure. The highest pitch is slightly detuned while there are double the number of voices of the lowest two pitches.

Moorer has been quoted as saying, "I like to say that the THX sound is the most widely-recognized piece of computer-generated music in the world. This may or may not be true, but it sounds cool!"[1]

Cultural status

The perceived loudness of the trailers was parodied by television series Tiny Toon Adventures (in the How I Spent My Vacation made-for-video movie), and The Simpsons in the episode "Burns' Heir", in which the noise causing eyeglasses to shatter and heads to explode. An excerpt from the Simpsons parody, with Grampa Simpson yelling, "Turn it up!" was later used in an actual THX trailer. LucasArts themselves also parodied the THX slogan "The Audience Is Listening" in The Curse of Monkey Island, as the game starts up with a choir of chittering monkeys which grows bigger and louder in the spirit of Deep Note, and ends with the slogan "The Audience is Deaf".

Rapper Dr. Dre was sued in 2000 by Lucasfilm, then-owner of THX, for using the Deep Note on his 2001 album. [2]